The reader loyalty code gives you full access to the site from when you enter it until the following Wednesday at 9pm. Find your unique code on the back page of Irish Country Living every week.
CODE ACCEPTED
You have full access to farmersjournal.ie on this browser until 9pm next Wednesday. Thank you for buying the paper and using the code.
CODE NOT VALID
Please try again or contact us.
For assistance, call 01 4199525
or email subs@farmersjournal.ie
If would like to speak to a member of our team, please call us on 01-4199525
Reset password
Please enter your email address and we will send you a link to reset your password
If would like to speak to a member of our team, please call us on 01-4199525
Link sent to your email address
We have sent an email to your address.
Please click on the link in this email to reset
your password. If you can't find it in your inbox,
please check your spam folder. If you can't
find the email, please call us on 01-4199525.
Email address not recognised
There is no subscription associated with this email
address. To read our subscriber-only content.
please subscribe or use the reader loyalty code.
If would like to speak to a member of our team, please call us on 01-4199525
You have no more free articles this month
We hope you've enjoyed your 6 free articles. To continue reading, sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe to get unlimited access for 30 days.
This content is available to digital subscribers and loyalty code users only. Sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.
This content is available to digital subscribers and loyalty code users only. Sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.
On what was a glorious summer’s day last Tuesday, thousands travelled from all over the country to Teagasc Grange for BEEF 2018. On arrival, spectators were greeted by Eddie O'Riordan on the introduction stand, which outlined the theme of the event "€nhancing Knowledge" and the schedule for the day.
Following the introduction stand, next up was the infrastructure village which had fencing, drainage systems, roadways, soil fertility, reseeding and water system demos on display.
Infrastructure village. \ Philip Doyle
The four main stands on the day outlined key performance indicators in the suckler-to-beef system, dairy calf to beef, animal genetics and grassland management.
There were many other new technologies in relation to grassland management, animal nutrition, beef genetics, reproductive management and animal health, including farm planning and implementation methods essential in increasing the competitiveness of the beef sector, on display on the day.
The Irish Farmers Journal and ICBF held a livestock demonstration focusing on replacement heifers, achieving the two-year-old calving target, animals of varying suckler €uroStar index and AI usage in suckler herds.
"If we keep using proven bulls we are going to stagnate gentic improvement so we need to use new test bulls also" Chris Daly #ICBF#BEEF2018pic.twitter.com/uQQJcx9yca
The Minister for Agriculture Michael Creed was one of the speakers at the evening's farmer forum chaired by Richard Curran from RTÉ, alongside Phelim O’Neill from the Irish Farmer Journal and farmers Mike Dillane, Joe Farrell and John Phelan.
Farmer forum starting now after a great day at Beef 2018. Prof. Gerry Boyle addressing the crowd before RTE’s Richard Curran chairs the forum with @creedcnw, @PhelimONeillFJ and farmers Mike Dillane, Joe Farrell and John Phelan @FJBeef@teagascpic.twitter.com/kM0rOhDGHa
“Very interesting day with lots of useful information to take home with us, it’s a very impressive set up cows are looking well and the paddock system looked great I suppose they are suffering a little bit from the lack of rain like everywhere else.”
“The new technology on show was very impressive; the Moocall heat monitors are something that looks really interesting and it would come in very useful on many beef farms. The Grass 10 demo was also very good showing how you can better utilise grass to get better feeding value out it.”
“Good day overall. The event was very well laid-out and thought-out. Walking through on the tour you always pick up something new that you never saw before that can be brought home and put into practice on your own farm.”
On what was a glorious summer’s day last Tuesday, thousands travelled from all over the country to Teagasc Grange for BEEF 2018. On arrival, spectators were greeted by Eddie O'Riordan on the introduction stand, which outlined the theme of the event "€nhancing Knowledge" and the schedule for the day.
Following the introduction stand, next up was the infrastructure village which had fencing, drainage systems, roadways, soil fertility, reseeding and water system demos on display.
Infrastructure village. \ Philip Doyle
The four main stands on the day outlined key performance indicators in the suckler-to-beef system, dairy calf to beef, animal genetics and grassland management.
There were many other new technologies in relation to grassland management, animal nutrition, beef genetics, reproductive management and animal health, including farm planning and implementation methods essential in increasing the competitiveness of the beef sector, on display on the day.
The Irish Farmers Journal and ICBF held a livestock demonstration focusing on replacement heifers, achieving the two-year-old calving target, animals of varying suckler €uroStar index and AI usage in suckler herds.
"If we keep using proven bulls we are going to stagnate gentic improvement so we need to use new test bulls also" Chris Daly #ICBF#BEEF2018pic.twitter.com/uQQJcx9yca
The Minister for Agriculture Michael Creed was one of the speakers at the evening's farmer forum chaired by Richard Curran from RTÉ, alongside Phelim O’Neill from the Irish Farmer Journal and farmers Mike Dillane, Joe Farrell and John Phelan.
Farmer forum starting now after a great day at Beef 2018. Prof. Gerry Boyle addressing the crowd before RTE’s Richard Curran chairs the forum with @creedcnw, @PhelimONeillFJ and farmers Mike Dillane, Joe Farrell and John Phelan @FJBeef@teagascpic.twitter.com/kM0rOhDGHa
“Very interesting day with lots of useful information to take home with us, it’s a very impressive set up cows are looking well and the paddock system looked great I suppose they are suffering a little bit from the lack of rain like everywhere else.”
“The new technology on show was very impressive; the Moocall heat monitors are something that looks really interesting and it would come in very useful on many beef farms. The Grass 10 demo was also very good showing how you can better utilise grass to get better feeding value out it.”
“Good day overall. The event was very well laid-out and thought-out. Walking through on the tour you always pick up something new that you never saw before that can be brought home and put into practice on your own farm.”
Speaking at Diary Day, Kevin Downing of the ICBF said that farmers will be able to view the CBV of calves entered in marts ahead of the sale from next week.
The ICSA said that only weight data recorded by ICBF technicians, which accounts for around 10% of total weights collected under SCEP, is used in the calculation of genetic evaluations.
Save to a collection
Recent collections
This article has already been saved
This article has been saved
Create a collection
Subscriber only
This content is available to digital subscribers only. Sign in to your account or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.SIGN INSUBSCRIBE FOR €1
SHARING OPTIONS: